Syrian Arab Republic Humanitarian Response Plan 2022 - 2023

Humanitarian response plan | Rev: 1.2 | published
People in need
5.5m
People targeted
3.9m
Requirements ($)
Current funding ($)
Coverage (%)

Cluster humanitarian profile

ID: CLNUT/BF1

Indicators overview

IndicatorUnitTarget
CO1: Improve access to equitable and quality curative nutrition services through the most appropriate modalities, systematic identification, referral, and treatment of moderate and severe wasting among children under five, pregnant and lactating women in collaboration with the health sector to enhance sustainability.
IN1: Number of boys and girls under 59 months treated for acute malnutrition in CMAM servicesIndividuals171,641
IN2: Number of PLWs treated for acute malnutrition in CMAM servicesIndividuals185,371
CO2: Improve the quality and coverage of integrated malnutrition prevention nutrition services for most vulnerable groups through blanket supplementary feeding interventions and micronutrient supplementation alongside promoting and protecting appropriate maternal infant and young nutrition.
IN1: # of girls and boys under five and pregnant and lactating women receiving comprehensive lifesaving maternal and child nutrition support servicesIndividuals3,583,596
CO3: Strengthen nutrition resilience through a principled humanitarian response mainstreaming effective coordination, capacity-building, contingency planning and quality information management system to inform programming and decision-making.
IN1: Existence of functional sector coordination for nutrition with co-lead from a National/Internal Non-Governmental OrganizationCoordination Mechanisms0
IN2: Nutrition Information Systems (NIS) includes aggregated data based on gender, age and disability.Data0
IN3: Existence of a scenario-based contingency plan for the nutrition sectorContingency Plans0
CA1: Activity 1.1.1 Ensure early identification through scaling up the family MUAC approach and strengthen referral pathways for both outpatient and inpatient management of moderate and severe wasting among CU5 and PLWs
IN1: # of boys and girls (6 – 59 months) screened for malnutritionIndividuals2,639,206
IN2: # PLWs screened for malnutritionIndividuals1,212,597
IN3: # of pregnant and lactating women in NW Syria trained on family MUAC approachIndividuals338,113
CA2: Activity 1.1.2 Provide quality integrate services for the management of moderate and severe wasting among CU5, pregnant and lactating mothers at scale, through both RRTs and Static approach.
IN1: # of boys and girls (6 - 59 months) severe acute malnutrition without medical complication reached with treatmentIndividuals35,709
IN2: # of boys and girls (0 - 59 months) with severe acute malnutrition and medical complications reached with inpatient treatmentIndividuals6,818
IN3: # of boys and girls (6 - 59 months) with moderate acute malnutrition reached with treatmentIndividuals135,932
IN4: # of PLWs with moderate acute malnutrition reached with treatmentIndividuals185,371
IN5: # of RRTs established and supported to provide treatment for moderate and severe wasting.Individuals189
CA3: Activity 1.1.3 Scale-up services for in-patient management of SAM with medical complications through equipping and supporting the efficient running of Stabilization Centers in pediatric units in collaboration with health centres
IN1: # of hospitals facilities providing services for the inpatient management of SAM with medical complicationsCenters30
CA4: Activity 1.1.4 Train and capacity build front line nutrition workers to screen CU5, pregnant and lactating women with external visual signs of corporal punishment and suspected GBV and refer them to respective PSS centres for support.
IN1: # of frontline workers and personnel who are trained and equipped with information on available GBV response services and referral procedures to support GBV survivorsIndividuals734
CA5: Activity 2.1.1 Screen pregnant and Lactating Women (PLW) and caregivers of children 0-24 months for infant feeding difficulties and provide facility and community-based skilled counselling on WHO-recommended Infant and Young Child Feeding in Emergencies (IYCF-E) and maternal nutrition practices
IN1: # of pregnant women and caregivers of children under 24 months of age counselled as one on one on appropriate IYCF-E and maternal nutrition.Individuals185,371
CA6: Activity 2.1.2 Scale-up of Baby-Friendly Spaces/Mother-Baby Areas at community and primary health care centre level using existing multi-sectoral platforms and channels.
IN1: # of pregnant women and caregivers of children under 24 months of age counselled as one on one on appropriate IYCF-E and maternal nutrition.Individuals185,371
CA7: Activity 2.1.3 Provide vulnerable families with children U2, Non-Breast Fed Infants under six months and PLW with nutrition and hygiene promotion/education, including safe food hygiene processes and hygiene/sanitation kits to support food preparation and IYCF in Covid-19 context through group awareness sessions and other SBCC channels.
IN1: # of pregnant women and caregivers of children under 24 months of age who receive group messaging on nutrition education and health and hygiene promotion.Individuals1,182,021
IN2: # of mother support groups established in line with the IYCF-E guidelinesGroups118,202
CA8: Activity 2.1.4 Strengthen awareness among collective humanitarian actors on compliance to the code alongside monitoring and reporting a violation of the Breast Milk Substitute Code
IN1: Number of Nutrition Sector partners staff trained on code complianceIndividuals2,326
CA9: Activity 2.1.5 Provide micronutrient supplementation to pregnant women and children U5 to accelerate anaemia reduction
IN1: # of boys and girls (6 - 59 months) who received micronutrient supplements (micronutrient powder (MNP)etc.) for four months.Individuals2,371,000
IN2: # of boys and girls (6-23 months) enrolled in Blanket Supplementary Feeding Programme.Individuals530,192
IN3: # of PLWs who received micronutrients, including iron folate and Micronutrient tablets, for six monthsIndividuals1,212,597
CA10: Activity 2.1.6 Develop a Cash and Voucher Assistance Operational Guidance to improve nutrition outcomes to mainstreaming Childrenynder 5 and Pregnant and lactating women and promoting nutrition outcomes
IN1: # of CVA guideline developed, endorsed and adopted by sector partnersDocuments1
CA11: Activity 2.1.7 Scale-up Cash and Voucher Assistance interventions to improve access to and consumption of safe, adequate and dietary diversified complementary foods among vulnerable children aged 6-24 months and pregnant and lactating women.
IN1: Number of PLWS receiving CVA with a nutrition objectiveIndividuals159,709
IN2: # of PLWs reached with integrated nutrition/food security and livelihood (FSL) services to support dietary diversityIndividuals574,453
CA12: Activity 2.1.8 Provide essential WASH messages in CMAM sites
IN1: Number of PLWs, caretakers of NBF infants and children U2 who receive hygiene promotion messages at the community level.Individuals1,182,021
CA13: Activity 3.1.1 Ensure effective coordination at national and sub-national levels
IN1: # of nutrition sector coordination mechanisms fully functional and supported (NES, NWS, GoS, WoS)Coordination Mechanisms4
IN2: # of Cluster Coordination Performance Monitoring (CCPM) surveys completedSurveys3
CA14: Activity 3.1.2 Strengthen technical capacities among health and nutrition workers at national and sub-national levels for the delivery of high-quality nutrition response at scale Ensure adequate implementation capacity
IN1: # of health and nutrition staff trained in IYCF-EIndividuals2,326
IN2: # of health and nutrition staff trained in Community Management of Acute Malnutrition, including the inpatient care guidelinesIndividuals734
IN3: # of health and nutrition staff trained in surveys/surveillanceIndividuals50
IN4: # of health and nutrition staff trained in nutrition cluster coordinationIndividuals10
CA15: Activity 3.1.3 Provide real-time, reliable, high-quality nutrition information to inform program decisions
IN1: # of sub-districts covered with nutrition surveillanceRegions268
IN2: # of nutrition surveys conducted ( NES, NWS, GoS)Surveys3
CA16: Activity 3.1.4 Strengthen technical capacities among nutrition sector partners for timely, comprehensive and accurate reporting for routine nutrition programme data using 4Ws, RRT KOBO Tools and maintain the CMAM Database.
IN1: # of nutrition sector partner staff trained on 4W and CMAM database reportingIndividuals45
CA17: Activity 3.1.5 Develop and equip evidence and scenario-based nutrition sector contingency plan
IN1: # of emergency preparedness plan for nutrition sector developed and adoptedPlans1

Operations by admin area

Organizations overview

OrganisationProjetsClusters
Action Against Hunger1Nutrition
AFAQ Humanitarian Relief Organization1Nutrition
Al-Ameen for Humanitarian Support1Nutrition
Al Resala Foundation1Nutrition
Alseeraj for Development and Healthcare1Nutrition
Al Sham Humanitarian Foundation1Nutrition
Bahar Organization1Nutrition
BINAA Organization for Development1Nutrition
Deutsche Welthungerhilfe e.V. (German Agro Action)1Nutrition
Dorcas Aid International1Nutrition
Hand in Hand for Aid and Development UK1Nutrition
Human Appeal UK1Nutrition
Humanitarian Initiative Association1Nutrition
Independent Doctors Association (Bağımsız Doktorlar Derneği)1Nutrition
Insan Charity for Relief and Development1Nutrition
International Humanitarian Relief1Nutrition
International NGOs (Confidential)3Nutrition
MEDAIR1Nutrition
Mehad (formerly UOSSM France)2Nutrition
Mercy-USA for Aid and Development1Nutrition
Mercy Without Limits1Nutrition
Orient for Human Relief1Nutrition
ORKIDE1Nutrition
Physicians Across Continents1Nutrition
Qatar Charity1Nutrition
Qatar Red Crescent Society1Nutrition
Samaritan's Purse1Nutrition
Save the Children1Nutrition
Shafak Organization1Nutrition
Social Development International - SDI1Nutrition
Syrian American Medical Society Foundation1Nutrition
Syrian Expatriates Medical Association1Nutrition
Syria Relief1Nutrition
Terre des Hommes - Italy1Nutrition
United Nations Children's Fund2Nutrition
Violet Organization1Nutrition
World Food Programme1Nutrition
World Vision Syria Response1Nutrition